MICHAEL O. ALLEN

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Voter registration fraud

Republican war against voting

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The GOP’s Blame-ACORN Game By Peter Dreier & John Atlas This article appeared in the November 10, 2008 edition of The Nation.

An increasingly desperate Republican attack machine has recently identified the community organizing group ACORN as Public Enemy Number One. Among ACORN’s alleged crimes, perhaps the most serious is that it caused, nearly single-handedly, the world’s financial crisis. That’s the fantasy. In the reality-based world, it was ACORN that sounded the alarm about the exploitative lending practices that led to the current mortgage meltdown and financial crisis.

Since the 1970s ACORN, which has 400,000 low- and moderate-income “member families” in more than 100 cities in forty states, has been warning Congress to protect borrowers from the banking industry’s irresponsible, risky and predatory practices–subprime loans, racial discrimination (called “redlining”) and rip-off fees. ACORN has persistently called for stronger regulations on banks, private mortgage companies, mortgage brokers and rating agencies. For years, ACORN has alerted public officials that the industry was hoodwinking many families into taking out risky loans they couldn’t afford and whose fine print they couldn’t understand.

Now John McCain and his fellow conservatives are accusing ACORN of strong-arming Congress and big Wall Street banks into making subprime loans to poor families who couldn’t afford them, thus causing the economic disaster. McCain’s campaign is running a one-and-a-half-minute video that claims Barack Obama once worked for ACORN, repeats the accusation that ACORN is responsible for widespread voter registration fraud and accuses ACORN of “bullying banks, intimidation tactics, and disruption of business.” The ad claims that ACORN “forced banks to issue risky home loans–the same types of loans that caused the financial crisis we’re in today.”

For months, the right-wing echo chamber–bloggers, columnists, editorial writers and TV and radio talk-show hosts–has pitched in with a well-orchestrated campaign to blame the mortgage crisis on ACORN and the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 1977 anti-redlining law. In a September 27 editorial, the Wall Street Journal wrote that “ACORN has promoted laws like the Community Reinvestment Act, which laid the foundation for the house of cards built out of subprime loans” and then falsely claimed the bailout bill would create a trust fund “pipeline” to fill ACORN’s coffers. On October 14 the Journal‘s lead editorial, Obama and ACORN, described ACORN as a “shady outfit” and accused the group of being “a major contributor to the subprime meltdown by pushing lenders to make home loans on easy terms, conducting ‘strikes’ against banks so they’d lower credit standards.”

Continue . . .

Read blogs, not newspapers

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Certainly blogs are the way to go if you want the real story behind the sudden discovery by the United States Justice Department and the FBI that the community organizing group, ACORN, may have perpetrated voter registration fraud.

Josh Marshall over at TalkingPointsMemo really covered the hell out of the U.S. attorney firings story last. He can claim at least one scalp, that of Alberto Gonzalez, the supremely unqualified attorney general. TPM simply leads the way on this story and many others.

So, when the site says over and over and over again that there is more than meet the eye to the mushrooming probe of the community organizing group, ACORN, that it is a politically motivated probe, more Republican dirty tricks, I have to sit up and notice. This has been done before. It was the underlining reason those all those United States attorneys were fired.

David Iglesias, former U.S. Attorney for the District of New Mexico, has told TPM he is astounded that DOJ would again bring these charges, especially so close to an election.

“I’m astounded that this issue is being trotted out again,” Iglesias told TPMmuckraker. “Based on what I saw in 2004 and 2006, it’s a scare tactic.” In 2006, Iglesias was fired as U.S. attorney thanks partly to his reluctance to pursue voter-fraud cases as aggressively as DOJ wanted — one of several U.S. attorneys fired for inappropriate political reasons, according to a recently released report by DOJ’s Office of the Inspector General.

Iglesias, who has been the most outspoken of the fired U.S. attorneys, went on to say that the FBI’s investigation seemed designed to inappropriately create a “boogeyman” out of voter fraud.

And he added that it “stands to reason” that the investigation was launched in response to GOP complaints. In recent weeks, national Republican figures — including John McCain at last night’s debate — have sought to make an issue out of ACORN’s voter-registration activities.

ACORN has registered 1.3 million voters, most of them Democrats. Republicans need to figure out a way to keep those voters from voting on Nov. 4. That is the reason they’ve raised the hue and cry over registration anomalies that, if they exist, are negligible, at best.

Rather than perpetrating fraud, ACORN is the victim of politically motivated witch-hunt.

The fact, however, is that even if what is alleged is true, it used to be against DOJ policy to bring such lawsuits so close to an election. Bush’s politicized Justice Dept. changed the rule in May 2007 so they could bring such lawsuits on the eve of elections.

Removed from the rules is this crucial passage:

“The Justice Department generally does not favor prosecution of isolated fraudulent voting transactions. This is based in part on constitutional issues that arise when federal jurisdiction is asserted in matters having only a minimal impact on the integrity of the voting process.”

U.S. Sen. Patrick Leahy, (D-VT), was livid discussing this with Republican sewer rat Bradley Schlozman.

John McCain, the floundering Republican presidential candidate, brought up ACORN during the last presidential debate on Wednesday, asking Sen. Barack Obama, his Democratic opponent to disclose the full extent of his relationship with ACORN. The group, he said with a straight face, was “on the verge of maybe perpetrating one of the greatest frauds in voter history in this country.”

I cannot wait for McCain’s political career to be over. He is the greatest fraud in American political history.